In the Digital Life 2011 survey from TNS released recently, we learn that almost two thirds of Britons don’t want to interact with brands on social networks. The survey states that mountains of digital waste, from friendless Facebook accounts to microsites that no one visits are polluting the digital space. No surprises there.
Most brands, it seems, are getting the fundamentals wrong. Especially in social media.
Supposedly blinded by the lure of glittering technology and visions of future earnings, many appear to have lost sight of how this wonderful digital stuff now available to us is actually being used by real people. Huge amounts of wishful thinking is (still) driving the creation of social campaigns. And the waste mountains just keep on growing.
People in Adland shouldn’t be surprised that “people don’t want to interact with brands in social media”. It would seem a rather odd expectation to believe that people actually would. The word ‘social’ provides a decent clue as to why. Sure, people including myself will respond to content from brands in this space, but to talk about interaction? Let’s not delude ourselves with jargon.
What people want from brands in simple terms are utility and entertainment. In a social context, one such utility is, of course, a brand’s role as a means for self-expression. Forgive me for using the tired term ‘social currency’ here. Embracing this reality is the condition of entry for any brand in the social space.
It’s about looking at brand content as a means for social interaction, rather than as a destination in itself.
Here’s the thing: People don’t really want to interact with brands if we’re being strict about it; people want to interact with people, which is precisely what people want out of social media. We don’t socialise with brands; we socialise with people. Hence, the thing brands should focus on in social media is to help conversations between the people there become better, richer, deeper and funnier. The conclusion that “Britons want brands to stay off social networks”, would suggest that their experiences in this space thus far haven’t added much value to their social interactions, but have presumably been perceived as interruptive, broadcastesque visual noise, irritating their eyeballs.
Brands should broadcast to people when people want to be broadcast to – in front of the telly – and they should help people be, well, more social in places where this is what they’ve come for.
Marketers need to understand that approaching social media with a broadcast mentality is utterly futile. What they need, ironically, is nothing different from what great brand building and advertising have always been based on: a profound understanding of people and what motivates us. The obvious addition being that brands now also need an understanding of human behaviour and interaction in the digital space, as well as creativity and the right digital capabilities to exploit it.
For a majority of organisations, it’s safe to say that this requires ‘unlearning’ of old habits to varying degrees in order to create space for a new, social approach to brand building to move in. Technologists are an absolutely critical part of this equation. But as they move in, it is paramount that their skills can effectively marry advertising’s cornerstone: a profound understanding of human nature. Because in silo, digital know-how offers little or no value.
Whilst the industry is ostensibly grappling with this ‘new’ reality, I can’t help but feel that the more things change the more they stay the same. Because at a fundamental level, the hallmark of great brand thinking hasn’t changed in the slightest: it remains rooted in an understanding of people. And more often than not it is this understanding that unlocks the Big Idea - substance for people to talk about and be social around. Irrespective of channel.
As posted on campaignasia.com on December 8th, 2011

northern
November 22, 2011
Well said Freddie
naoko
November 23, 2011
An excellent point eloquently written. Love the slide. Made me chuckle. Thank you for this.
Sumit Roy
December 12, 2011
Well said, Fred.
markwojtasiak
December 14, 2011
Great post Fredrik and you are spot-on when you say “this requires ‘unlearning’ of old habits to varying degrees in order to create space for a new, social approach to brand building to move in.” Some “older” more established companies in the tech sector tend to take themselves too seriously, and that is communicated through the brand. I don’t know about you, but I am tired of the tired leadership messaging. Make me laugh, cry, cheer. Give me something worth sharing with my friends, because I just don’t seem to want to share that you are #1 in your sector, or have been in biz for 20+ years…but that’s just me. Thanks again for the thought provoking post…I think I’ll share this with my friends.
fredrik sarnblad
December 15, 2011
Thanks for checking in and leaving a trace.
Mark, I completely agree with you: nobody gives a toss about dry market facts such as “We’ve been in biz for over 20 years”. Not exactly share-worthy, is it?
toto
December 30, 2011
i am very happy i have read this. proper shit. you should post more often Fredrik.
northern
January 20, 2012
yes he should